登陆注册
5190100000100

第100章 Cleaning Up the Patent-Medicine and Other Evils (1

In 1892 The Ladies' Home Journal announced that it would thereafter accept no advertisements of patent medicines for its pages.It was a pioneer stroke.During the following two years, seven other newspapers and periodicals followed suit.The American people were slaves to self-medication, and the patent-medicine makers had it all their own way.There was little or no legal regulation as to the ingredients in their nostrums; the mails were wide open to their circulars, and the pages of even the most reputable periodicals welcomed their advertisements.The patent-medicine business in the United States ran into the hundreds of millions of dollars annually.The business is still large; then it was enormous.

Into this army of deceit and spurious medicines, The Ladies' Home Journal fired the first gun.Neither the public nor the patent-medicine people paid much attention to the first attacks.But as they grew, and the evidence multiplied, the public began to comment and the nostrum makers began to get uneasy.

The magazine attacked the evil from every angle.It aroused the public by showing the actual contents of some of their pet medicines, or the absolute worthlessness of them.The Editor got the Women's Christian Temperance Union into action against the periodicals for publishing advertisements of medicines containing as high as forty per cent alcohol.He showed that the most confidential letters written by women with private ailments were opened by young clerks of both sexes, laughed at and gossiped over, and that afterward their names and addresses, which they had been told were held in the strictest confidence, were sold to other lines of business for five cents each.He held the religious press up to the scorn of church members for accepting advertisements which the publishers knew and which he proved to be not only fraudulent, but actually harmful.He called the United States Post Office authorities to account for accepting and distributing obscene circular matter.

He cut an advertisement out of a newspaper which ended with the statement:

"Mrs.Pinkham, in her laboratory at Lynn, Massachusetts, is able to do more for the ailing women of America than the family physician.Any woman, therefore, is responsible for her own suffering who will not take the trouble to write to Mrs.Pinkham for advice."Next to this advertisement representing Mrs.Lydia Pinkham as "in her laboratory," Bok simply placed the photograph of Mrs.Pinkham's tombstone in Pine Grove Cemetery, at Lynn, showing that Mrs.Pinkham had passed away twenty-two years before!

It was one of the most effective pieces of copy that the magazine used in the campaign.It told its story with absolute simplicity, but with deadly force.

The proprietors of "Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup" had strenuously denied the presence of morphine in their preparation.Bok simply bought a bottle of the syrup in London, where, under the English Pharmacy Act, the authorities compelled the proprietors of the syrup to affix the following declaration on each bottle: "This preparation, containing, among other valuable ingredients, a small amount of morphine is, in accordance with the Pharmacy Act, hereby labelled 'Poison!'" The magazine published a photograph of the label, and it told its own convincing story.It is only fair to say that the makers of this remedy now publish their formula.

Bok now slipped a cog in his machinery.He published a list of twenty-seven medicines, by name, and told what they contained.One preparation, he said, contained alcohol, opium, and digitalis.He believed he had been extremely careful in this list.He had consulted the highest medical authorities, physicians, and chemists.But in the instance of the one preparation referred to above he was wrong.

The analysis had been furnished by the secretary of the State Board of Health of Massachusetts; a recognized expert, who had taken it from the analysis of a famous German chemist.It was in nearly every standard medical authority, and was accepted by the best medical authorities.Bok accepted these authorities as final.Nevertheless, the analysis and the experts were wrong.A suit for two hundred thousand dollars was brought by the patent-medicine company against The Curtis Publishing Company, and, of course, it was decided in favor of the former.But so strong a public sentiment had been created against the whole business of patent medicines by this time that the jury gave a verdict of only sixteen thousand dollars, with costs, against the magazine.

Undaunted, Bok kept on.He now engaged Mark Sullivan, then a young lawyer in downtown New York, induced him to give up his practice, and bring his legal mind to bear upon the problem.It was the beginning of Sullivan's subsequent journalistic career, and he justified Bok's confidence in him.He exposed the testimonials to patent medicines from senators and congressmen then so widely published, showed how they were obtained by a journalist in Washington who made a business of it.He charged seventy-five dollars for a senator's testimonial, forty dollars for that of a congressman, and accepted no contract for less than five thousand dollars.

Sullivan next exposed the disgraceful violation of the confidence of women by these nostrum vendors in selling their most confidential letters to any one who would buy them.Sullivan himself bought thousands of these letters and names, and then wrote about them in the magazine.

One prominent firm indignantly denied the charge, asserting that whatever others might have done, their names were always held sacred.In answer to this declaration Sullivan published an advertisement of this righteous concern offering fifty thousand of their names for sale.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 气度决定格局

    气度决定格局

    《气度决定格局》通过马云创业的所想、所说、所做、让人们零距离接触马云。也让人们感受到一个创业家的胸怀与气度,告诉人们无论是人生的高低起伏,还是事业的高潮低谷,都要以一种开阔的胸襟和气度面对。有多开阔的胸怀,就能容纳多开阔的天地,就能开拓多恢弘的未来。
  • 岩洞幽灵

    岩洞幽灵

    斯特兰奇小姐并不总是表现出一副苦思冥想的样子——至少在盛大的集会上或在公众的眼里并非如此。不过,在普罗沃斯特太太的音乐晚会上她肯定会陶醉其中,达到一种忘我的境界。假如那是一种高雅的音乐,人们倒也可以理解她那副出神的样子。然而,那音乐明显属于一般水平,而维奥莱特的听觉又是那么敏锐,她的乐感向来都是训练有素的,不是真正最优秀的音乐,她不会浪费自己的宝贵时间。
  • History of Animals

    History of Animals

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 植物百科(中国儿童课外必读)

    植物百科(中国儿童课外必读)

    植物是地球生态圈中的一个庞大群体,与我们人类的生存与生活息息相关。本书根据植物本身的特点及人类认识植物的规律,囊括了植物的生活、植物的种类、植物的文化等各方面的内容,以详尽的资料、简洁的文字向读者展示了一个栩栩如生的植物世界。读者不仅可以清晰地看到植物从简单到复杂的进化脚印,而且可以获得对各类植物的崭新认识。
  • 猎滟大小姐

    猎滟大小姐

    他权柄在握,沉默寡言,却可以抱着她说一整夜的情话并且百般讨好。他腹黑,狠辣,深沉,痴心。得罪他,或许他会直接让你去死,但是得罪她,他一定会让你生不如死!只因,他所有柔情似水的眼神只落在她的身上。他说,他是她的守护神,而她,却是他的命!
  • 消化健脾科学养生滋补食谱

    消化健脾科学养生滋补食谱

    当今世界,随着人们生活节奏的加快,高强度、高效率的生活现状,使众多忙于工作、精神压力大的人们越来越吃不消,因而前所未有地重视起自身保健了。化学药物的毒副作用,使人们“重返大自然”的心理越来越强,在这一背景下药膳食疗这一独特的中华文化宝库的奇葩,越来越显示出她深厚的底蕴和夺目的光彩,为此我们精心编写了这本《消化健脾科学养生滋补食谱》,希望读者能在获得美味可口的佳肴同时,也滋补了身体,祛除了疾病,拥有健康、快乐的人生。
  • 唐玄宗御制道德真经疏外传

    唐玄宗御制道德真经疏外传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 荆釵记

    荆釵记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 无冕之王

    无冕之王

    邱小叶一定是穷到疯了,不然怎么会以草根身份混到贵族学院当记者?还被搞错性别当上了假小子!不过为了获得“无冕之王”丰厚的爆料奖金也值了。和当红男子乐队“Fire”同吃同睡,有三大美男围绕身边,每天脸红心跳暧昧十足。不过越接触越心慌,主唱任熙雨的笑容太阳光,不想只和他做哥们,也不想再爆料。但她还没来得及坦明身份去告白,就遭情敌报复被揭穿,还把“Fire”乐队也拉入绯闻中,邱小叶面临重大危机,是和“Fire”乐队友情分裂?被任熙雨划入黑名单?或者连“无冕之王”也再无缘?青春如火如荼,怎肯甘拜下风?用真心实意打败流言换回友情和爱情,爆料重要,但做自己的无冕之王更重要!
  • 江湖名人谱

    江湖名人谱

    身怀利器,杀心自起。一首江湖逍遥曲,一段爱恨情仇事。此中善恶多为心,浪海浮沉不由人。 辨善恶,量天下 求而有所得,做而有所成, 自不负此男儿身。 百年之后作白骨, 亦有雄名在人间。